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Oval Nested Woven Nylon Bins from Container StoreToday, I’m sharing my latest contribution to the stylish and sophisticated BostonMamas.com, *the* resource site for moms in Boston and beyond.  Enjoy!

Before I (or any of my friends) had children, I remember walking into the houses of those who did and being horrified…blocks in a tumbled-down heap on the kitchen floor, dress-up clothes strewn all over the couch, cars under the toilet.  My house will never look like this, I thought.  But just a few years and a couple of kids later, I realized that toys creeping out from the requisite toybox is inevitable, and takes a huge amount of energy to combat it.

Since that moment of realization, my husband and I have tried a slew of products meant specifically for organizing toys, but it was only recently that we faced the truth.  It’s not the product but the process that can free you from having toys take over your home.

1) Purge, divide and conquer:  Take a good hard look at the toys in your home. Does your four-year-old use the Fisher-Price farm set?  Do you have two dozen puzzles? Too much stuff can be really overwhelming for kids, not to mention the adults who have to live among it.  Once your child has gone to sleep, spend an evening dedicated to purging the toy collection and organizing what’s left based on the way your child plays (dolls and clothes together, trains and tracks together, Legos separate from Duplos, etc.).  If there are items you can’t make a decision about without the child’s input, make a pile and review in the morning.  Donate or sell the rest. 

2) Choose a home:  You don’t have to have a playroom to have a “primary residence” for toys.  Dedicate a corner of the living room, your child’s room, or a room in the house that’s not used very often.  Depending on how your home is laid out, you may want to select one more “vacation home.”  This allows for distribution of different types of toys, particularly if your child plays on two different floors.  For example, the majority of our sons’ toys are kept in our sunroom on the first floor, but we keep big trucks and the bowling and ring toss sets in the basement.

3) Store based on your décor:  Where you store your child’s toys doesn’t have to be plastic and primary-colored, but it does need to be child-accessible or else you’re going to be called to action whenever your child wants the Duplo blocks.  Consider where in your house you’ve chosen to store toys.  Go vertical with shelving and baskets if you have enough wall space.  A console with sliding doors works nicely in a room that isn’t just for toys.  A storage ottoman is terrific for a living room. 

4) A place for everything and everything in its place:  In our house, we use IKEA shelving with a combination of plastic beverage tubs (to hold chunky toys like bristle blocks and train tracks), plastic lidded boxes (to hold toys that have smaller pieces like Legos and Playmobil), and built in rattan baskets for puzzles, games and dress-up clothes. Once you’ve selected your storage system, explain where everything “lives” to your child (if he or she is old enough) – this will go a long way in both playing and cleaning up.  If you have the time and inclination, take pictures of the contents of each container, then laminate and affix them as labels for pre-readers (even better, include the word and the picture).

5) Collect in key areas:  It’s inevitable – toys will make their way from where they’re stored to other areas of the house.  Figure out where those areas are (for us, it’s the kitchen and the car) and create runaway toy collection spots

6) Get on schedule:  This is the key step, because the first five won’t mean a thing if you don’t get into a regular clean-up schedule.  Whether it’s every night or the end of every week, you and your child can work as a team to clean up – return the runaway toys to their homes and pick up the main play area.  If the system is working, and every toy truly has a place, this part shouldn’t take much more than a few minutes each night or 15-30 minutes once a week.

Image credit: Oval Nested Woven Nylon Baskets, The Container Store

3073_orla_kiely_classic_med_tote_hatch_multi_front_853_generalNo decorating tips today, so just go ahead and file this post under “things you might find inside the mudroom”  — it’s the latest bag I’m coveting.  This Orla Kiely tote is functional, bright and seasonless — just the kind of bag I love.  Works for the office when I’m toting around research reports, or on the weekend when I’m toting water bottles and bags of goldfish for the boys.  And the best part?  Right now it’s 35% off the original price at Orla Kiely.com.

Seems like the perfect way to celebrate being officially diaper bag-free now, don’t you think?

Image credit: Orla Kiely Multi Cross Hatch Stem Medium Tote, Muse Ten

This past winter, our kids were given beautiful Tibetan prayer flags by one of their grandparents.  As we returned home from the festivities, I thought briefly about absconding with the flags and adorning the outside of our home with the bright colors and messages of peace and good fortune.  Remembering that the flags were, in fact, a gift for the boys, I adorned the inside of their rooms instead.  With a push pin here and a push pin there, the flags have added movement and joy clear across each their rooms (and up from their often-messy floors).

Tibetan Flags Crop

And it got me thinking, wouldn’t life be more fun with more flags?  Like these…

Pottery Barn Marine Flags

or these…

Wallies Flags

    or even these?

Country Living Tea Towels

 Have you ever decorated with flags?

Image credits (from top to bottom): Paige Lewin, Pottery Barn, Wal-Mart, and Country Living 

DSC01025Have an empty wall in need of some color? Here’s a quick fix: hang up an under-$10 pegrail from your local home supply store (I got mine from Lowe’s for $8), and resurrect some of those scarves that you collected during the pashmina-craze of the late ’90s that work with the colors in your décor. In addition to brightening up your walls, you get the added bonus of incorporating some of those long-forgotten beauties back into your wardrobe.

DSC00989Although I try to eat veggies and fruit as much as possible, all too often our weekly produce ends up withering away in our ancient fridge “crisper” drawer.  I spotted a better way to store those fresh peaches and get a summery design kick to the countertop at my stylish friend Marianne’s house this weekend.  Placing produce in a pretty basket (she got hers here) keeps it at room temperature and moving faster from kitchen to table.  How can you resist fresh strawberries staring you down?

West Tisbury LambI was first introduced to Alison Shaw’s work when visiting a friend on Martha’s Vineyard in the early ’90s.  Since then, Alison’s West Tisbury Lamb has become one of my favorite baby gifts.  But it wasn’t until I visited her site recently that I realized the breadth of her work.  Ranging from abstract seascapes to striking black & white architectural images to the colbalt blues of her collection from Greece, Alison’s portfolio includes sheer beauty for walls.  As a fledgling artist myself, I’m particularly drawn to her images from artists’ studios, proving that a messy space — in and of itself — can be stunning.

Alison Shaw Artists Studio

Posters, notecards, and books available online.  Fine art photography prints available at Alison’s gallery in Oak Bluffs, exhibits listed here, or by calling 508-696-7429.

Images: Alison Shaw  

Amy Butler BeddingFor those of us who are fans of the bright, modern, fresh designs of Amy Butler (I sometimes wish I had a daughter just so I could dress her in clothing made with Miss Butler’s fabrics),  there’s something new to covet — a just-released line of bedding available at Bed, Bath and Beyond.  I had heard word from fellow home design bloggers that Miss Butler would be releasing a line this summer and have been checking in on her site ever since.  Thanks to a late-night Twitter check-in tonight, I hear it’s finally available online!  Five collections, delicious colors, 400-thread-count sheets and 100% organic…get a good (and beautiful) night’s sleep!

Image credit: Amy Butler Design

Urban Outfitters Butterfly ChairI don’t know if they’re making a resurgence, or if the great lounge chair from my childhood home just happens to be everywhere I am right now, but Butterflies seem to be following me.  First, a month or so ago while passing through Urban Outfitters — a foldable version with a leather cover.  Then in a Ralph Lauren Home ad while reading the Sunday Times.  A few weeks later, two set side-by-side as the seating area in a newly-opened local clothing boutique.  And finally, the very chair from my childhood on a recent visit to Vermont. 

Butterfly chairs, designed by Argentinian architect Jorge Ferrari-Hardoy in 1938, became commercially available when Knoll began producing them in 1947.  Since then, numerous manufacturers have produced versions of the original design, and today you can find them a retailers ranging from Modern Furniture Classics to Circa50 to PB Teen

It’s shape and endless cover choices means the incredibly versatile Butterfly can give a room a strong design statement and be used nearly everywhere.  In my house growing up, our Butterfly chair played a leading role indoors, but they can make a really stunning set up outside too, just check out the patio at the Parker Palm Springs

 Parker Palm Springs.AT

 

Image credit: Apartment Therapy

bookshelf cropI’ve been in love with built-in bookshelves for as long as I can remember.  Maybe it’s that they remind me of my childhood home, or maybe it’s just that I knew from early on, without really knowing, that built-ins can be a beautiful way to maximize a space and make it feel positively custom.  Whatever the reason, I have been ripping out pictures of built-ins and fantasizing about them since I started hoarding home design magazines a decade ago.

So my dream finally came true when after spending more than two years talking incessantly about how the knee-wall in our master bedroom would be the-perfect-spot for built-ins and making grand promises of how my ever-growing piles would transform into neat, useful, and dare I say, decorative additions to our room, my husband finally gave in.   

Enter Bill Jones of FreshAir Millworks, carpenter extraordanaire.  In one short week (and only one day in our house for the installation), Jonesy whipped up a new piece for us that delivered exactly the vision I had every night as I fell asleep staring at that wall.  I don’t know why it took us so long to move on this project — possible fear of working with a contractor (we’re newbies), not knowing how to access a contractor without getting ripped off (personal referrals are key), or just getting up the gumption to spend a chunk of money on something so — well — permanent (that’s a hard one to swallow unless your absolutely sure what you want).  But the whole process of working with Jonesy was so easy, that it’s hard to stop coming up with projects for him now. 

DSC00804DSC00913

Want a little bit of FreshAir Millworks for your home?  Contact Bill Jones at (508) 587-1109.

MSLO Watering Can ShowerNow that summer has finally arrived (better late than never), I’m looking forward to long barefooted days outside.  Although the kid-proof rug in my mudspace is terrific for stopping tracked-in dirt, after my boys spend a couple of hours digging in the yard excavating dinosaurs, they’re ready for a wash-down.  Rather than giving their toesies a full-force hosing, I love this stylish and sensible idea from Martha Stewart.  Place a teak bath mat (a great slip-free surface) and a full watering can by the back door to rinse off dirty or sandy feet before coming inside.  Another dual-use option is a galvanized boot tray, souped up with drilled-in drainage holes and filled with smooth pebbles — should the rain come again (and you know it will), bring it inside and use it as a parking space for your wellies.

Image credit: Martha Stewart